Toyota MiniAce

Motor vehicle
Toyota MiniAce
Overview
ManufacturerToyota (until December 1969)
Daihatsu (from January 1970)
Hino Motors (from January 1970)
ProductionNov. 1967 – Nov. 1975
AssemblyTakaoka plant, Toyota, Aichi, Japan
Hamura, Tokyo, Japan (Hino)
Body and chassis
Body styletruck
microvan
microbus
LayoutMR
PlatformP100-series
RelatedToyota Publica
Powertrain
Engine790 cc 2U air-cooled OHV H2
Transmission4-speed manual (column shift)
Dimensions
Wheelbase1,950 mm (77 in)
Length3,505 mm (138 in) (truck)
3,610 mm (142 in) (van/bus)
Width1,380 mm (54 in)
Height1,625–1,675 mm (64–66 in)
Curb weight600–770 kg (1,320–1,700 lb)
Chronology
SuccessorToyota TownAce

The Toyota MiniAce was a small utility vehicle built by Toyota from November 1967 until November 1975.[1] It shared many parts with the Toyota Publica, especially the Publica P20 Pickup. In Japan, it was sold through the Toyota Corolla Store and Toyota Auto Store networks. Because it shares many parts with the popular Toyota Publica and the highly collectable Toyota Sports 800 most MiniAces have been used for parts and very few survive.[2] Its exterior dimensions and engine displacement, while very small, do not conform to "kei car" Japanese government regulations.

History

The concept originally possessed a particularly small turning circle of only 7.8 m (25.6 ft).[3] It entered the market in November 1967, as a truck or as a panel van. Priced low, in consideration of its 500 kg (1,100 lb) payload, the MiniAce sold well, especially due to its compliance to the Japanese annual road tax obligation.

True success followed once the MiniAce Van (UP100V) and MiniAce Coach, a seven-seater minibus, were added in August 1968.[1] Soon, though, more modern challengers like Mitsubishi's Delica began whittling away at the market share of the MiniAce. Its toughest competitor, the 1969 Datsun Sunny Cab received a water-cooled 1.2 liter engine for 1972.[4] The MiniAce's 2U-B engine offered only 36 PS (26 kW) at 4,600 rpm,[3] which was enough for a claimed top speed of 110 km/h (68 mph). Nonetheless, Toyota's 1967 engagement with Daihatsu meant that Toyota was to relinquish this portion of the market, and no more serious investments in the MiniAce were made. After December 1969, manufacture was transferred from Toyota's Takaoka plant and was now shared between Hino, Daihatsu, and the Fuji Auto Body Co., Ltd. which made the bodies.[1]

In the early seventies the MiniAce received a very light facelift, mainly consisting of a plastic shield with a "Toyota" script located just beneath the front windshield. As the air-cooled U engine would have a hard time passing new, stricter emissions standards for 1976, production was halted in November 1975. Although the MiniAce had become too small and spartan for the now more sophisticated Japanese consumers, it was still a strong seller in other Asian markets. The larger LiteAce and all new TownAce took over, with Daihatsu's Hijet covering the lower end of the segment.

In December 2011, Toyota returned to this market segment with the introduction of the Toyota Pixis Van and Truck, rebadged Daihatsu Hijets.[5]

References

  1. ^ a b c ミニエース [MiniAce]. トヨタ自動車75年史 [75 years of Toyota history] (in Japanese). Toyota Motor Co.
  2. ^ UP100 トヨタミニエース [UP100 Toyota MiniAce] (in Japanese). 旧州旧車協会(KKK)[Kyushu Classic Car Association]. Retrieved 2013-01-13.
  3. ^ a b 愛される車づくり。トヨタはあすにいどみます。 [Lovable car manufacture. Toyota dares to defy tomorrow.] (catalog) (in Japanese), Toyota Motor Co., 1972, pp. 3–4
  4. ^ 1968年 トヨタ ミニエース [1968 Toyota MiniAce]. Gazoo.com. 名車館 [Great Car Pavilion] (in Japanese). Toyota Motor Co. Archived from the original on 2004-09-09. Retrieved 2013-01-14.
  5. ^ 新型軽商用車「ピクシス バン」「ピクシス トラック」を発売 [New light commercials Pixis Van and Pixis Truck released]. ニュース [News] (in Japanese). Toyota Motor Co. 2011-12-01. Archived from the original on 2012-01-30. Retrieved 2013-01-14.
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« previousToyota road cars timeline, 1960–1989 — next »
Type 1960s 1970s 1980s
Model year 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Subcompact Publica P10 Publica P20 Publica, Toyota 1000 P30
Publica Starlet P40 Starlet P60 Starlet P70
Tercel, Corsa L10 Tercel/Corolla II/
Corsa L20
Tercel/Corolla II/
Corsa L30
Sprinter Carib L20
Compact Corolla, Sprinter E10 Corolla, Sprinter E20 Corolla E30/50, Sprinter E40/60 Corolla, Sprinter E70 Corolla/Sprinter
E80
Corolla/Sprinter
E90
Corolla FX E80 Corolla FX E90
Sprinter Carib E90
Carina A10/30 Carina A40/50 Carina A60 Carina T150 Carina T170
Carina ED T160 Carina ED T180
Celica Camry A40/50
Mid-size Corona T20/30 Corona T40/50 Corona T80/90 Corona T100/110 Corona T130, Corona T120 Corona T140 Corona T150 Corona T170
Camry/Vista V10 Camry/Vista V20
Mark II T60/70 Mark II X10/20 Mark II, Cressida, Chaser X30/40 Mark II, Cressida, Chaser, Cresta X50/60 Mark II/Cressida/
Chaser/
Cresta X70
Mark II/Cressida/
Chaser/
Cresta X80
Full-size Crown S20 Crown S30 Crown S40 Crown S50 Crown S60/70 Crown S80/100 Crown S110 Crown S120 Crown S130
Crown 8 G10 Century G20 Century G30 Century G35 Century G40
Sports car S800 P15
2000GT F10
Celica A20/30 Celica A40/50 Celica A60 Celica T160
Supra A40 Supra A60 Supra A70
Grand tourer Soarer Z10 Soarer Z20
Roadster MR2 W10